Monday, June 27, 2016

Benefit fraud reporting:

Writing benefit fraud reporting is a critical skill for fraud examiners. A thorough investigation or keen analysis will often do little good if the fraud examiner cannot convey the information in a written format and benefit fraud reporting. Fraud examiners must be flexible in their writing technique because benefit fraud reporting should generally be tailored to the situation, as well as to the needs of the party requesting the report. Even so, many aspects of good writing; such as accuracy, relevancy, and clarity; are universal to all benefit fraud reporting.

Types of reports:

The two most common types of reports fraud examiners are engaged to create are fraud examination reports and expert reports:

Fraud Examination Reports:

A fraud examination report documents the results of a fraud examination and is generally created by one or more critical members of the fraud examination team. fraud reporting is a particularly important function in fraud examinations. This fraud report conveys all evidence necessary to evaluate the case, and it can be used to corroborate previously known facts. An accurate fraud report will add credibility to the fraud examination and to the fraud examiner's work. Additionally, requiring a benefit fraud reporting will force the fraud examiner to consider his actions during an investigation by requiring that he documents his process. And a well- benefit fraud reporting will omit irrelevant information, thereby allowing pertinent facts to stand out. A first-rate fraud examination report is based on a first-rate fraud examination.

Expert Reports:

Many fraud cases benefit from the assistance of an expert witness, who (unlike most witnesses) may provide technical opinions through his testimony. Typically, fraud examiners who serve as expert witnesses in litigation are tasked with providing an expert fraud report, which requires them to provide particular information about their qualifications, their opinions, the bases of those opinions, and various other pieces of information. The purpose of an expert fraud report is to inform the parties, the judge, and the jury (if applicable) about the expert’s opinion of the case, as well as his credibility for commenting on such issues.

The content of the report is highly dependent on the needs of the situation. For example, the expert witness might provide an expert opinion on an organisation’s auditing practices. If the expert used a benefit fraud reporting as part of the basis of forming the opinion, the benefit fraud reporting would likely need to be attached to the expert report.

However, each benefit fraud reporting in this scenario is a separate document with its own structure. In some situations, the person who wrote the fraud examination report might also be called as an expert witness, so it is important to keep in mind the different purposes of each benefit fraud reporting.

The Trial-Ready Standard:

A guiding principle for writing benefit fraud reporting is: "Would I be able to defend this report in a judicial proceeding?" Most fraud cases will not be presented in such proceedings, but the purpose of the benefit fraud reporting is to give an objective and reliable account and analysis of the facts of a case. A court or administrative hearing is the ultimate test of a report, because the judge or the opposing parties will thoroughly scrutinise it. Therefore, even when litigation is unlikely, a written benefit fraud reporting that can withstand scrutiny in a judicial proceeding is the gold standard. Fraud examiners should always know what reliable evidence is available to back up each statement expressed in the benefit fraud reporting and make sure that case analysis is of professional quality.

About Abdo Mounir -

Senior Manager and fraud examiner in mining industry. Head the investigations related to fraud. My role includes driving the culture of integrity And ethics within the Company by conducting regular fraud investigations.